Nope, sticky bit will not help you in that case. From the man page of chown:
As recommended, I'd go for the group thing described in my former post. If it is no sensitive data, you could always chmod it to o+r so that all others could read it, which would include hugo2 as well as all users on that system.
hello
chown not change ownership
before:
205:system ~kuku
chown kuku:system ~kuku
after no change
205:system ~kuku
aix box
can someone help me?
ariec (2 Replies)
I have a strange problem in my Linux box (Suse). Recently I took over this box as admin even though I have no prior admin experience. Following is my issue
I had following users under 'root' group initially
user1
user2
user3
Since I did not like user ids under root group. I modifed these... (9 Replies)
hi
i wrote a script to run 'C' executable which will create a new file, after that util is completed, i have to change the file ownership to some other user. for that i used "chown" for changing the file permission in Korn script
:confused:but it is throwing error is "operation... (2 Replies)
I have a file fin2009_4.txt.gz in the unix ftp server. Owner of the file is: ftpusr.
-rw-r--r-- 1 ftpusr sap 0 Feb 19 10:19 fin2009_4.txt.gz
When I try to delete this file after copying to my home folder, I am getting the following error.
rm: fin2009_4.txt.gz1: override... (4 Replies)
Hi All,
I need your help in changing the owner of a directory.
I have a created a direcotry TEST with user "abc"....for the group "ftp".
Now i wnated to change the owner of the directory TEST.
i used the below command to do so:
chown abc:sftp TEST
This is giving me an error... (5 Replies)
I am trying to change the directory to owner of Sybase. But I get permission denied. I did login as root.
newd1> ls -l
total 58
drwxr-xr-x 2 prod develop 5 Oct 17 06:51 bin
drwxr-xr-x 2 prod develop 7 Oct 17 07:18 etc
dr-xr-xr-x 1 root root 1... (15 Replies)
I am working on a test machine.
I just discovered that I have misunderstood the way the following command is run.
chown -Rv some_user:users /some_folder/*This command do exactly what I want. Change the owner of every things from the named folder and in all child folders.
But of course it leave... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: jcdole
13 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
cscope-indexer
cscope-indexer(1) General Commands Manual cscope-indexer(1)NAME
cscope-indexer - Script to index files for cscope
SYNOPSIS
cscope-indexer [-v] [-f database_file] [-i list_file] [-l] [-r]
DESCRIPTION
This script generates a list of files to index (cscope.out), which is then (optionally) used to generate a cscope database. You can use
this script to just build a list of files, or it can be used to build a list and database. This script is not used to just build a data-
base (skipping the list of files step), as this can be simply done by just calling "cscope -b".
Normally, cscope will do its own indexing, but this script can be used to force indexing. This is useful if you need to recurse into sub-
directories, or have many files to index (you can run this script from a cron job, during the night). It is especially useful for large
projects, which can contstantly have source files added and deleted; by using this script, the changing sources files are automatically
handled.
Currently, any paths containing "/CVS/" or "/RCS/" are stripped out (ignored).
OPTIONS -f database_file
Specifies the cscope database file (default: cscope.out).
-i list_file
Specifies the name of the file into which the list of files to index is placed (default: cscope.files).
-l Suppress the generation/updating of the cscope database file. Only a list of files is generated.
-r Recurse into subdirectories to locate files to index. Without this option, only the current directory is searched.
-v Be verbose. Output simple progress messages.
SEE ALSO cscope(1)AUTHOR
This manual page was written for the Debian GNU/Linux system by Robert Lemmen <robertle@semistable.com> (but may be used by others, of
course)
Script to index files for cscope 30. December 2002 cscope-indexer(1)